FICTION

Chernobyl's Wild Kingdom: Life in the Dead Zone

64p. bibliog. further reading. glossary. index. maps. notes. photos. websites. Twenty-First Century. 2014. RTE $34.60. ISBN 9781467711548. LC 2013039471.
COPY ISBN
Gr 5–8—In April 1986, Reactor Number 4 in the Chernobyl nuclear power plant exploded, emitting a flood of radioactive material that devastated the surrounding countryside. The residual radioactivity permeating soil, water, plants and animals led to the creation of a miles-wide Exclusion Zone closed to human residents and dubbed the Dead Zone by the press, the general public, and scientists alike. Scientists have continued to study the ecology of this site during the intervening years, and Johnson's lucid text describes their methods and findings in this chunk of land on the border between the Ukraine and Belarus. She has read their written reports and consulted scientists in the field to determine long-term effects on local wildlife after almost 30 years of exposure to varying doses of radioactivity. While some animals and plants appear to have been adversely affected, a large number of species seem to be coping relatively untouched. Even some former human residents (mostly elderly women) have returned to small hamlets and farms on the edge of the Zone, and poachers appear to be active in the area as well. (Other humans, massively exposed at the time of the explosion, have not fared so well.) The readable text is interspersed with dark red sidebars on such topics as how the researchers maintain safety in hot zones, the resistance of some plants to effects of long-term radiation, and reports of the damage suffered by human evacuees from the contaminated zone. Small color photos and maps provide visual evidence and geographical information. A final chapter reports on the tsunami-driven nuclear failure in the 2011 Fukushima disaster and ponders the future for similar "accidents." Thought-provoking.—Patricia Manning, formerly at Eastchester Public Library, NY
The resurgence of life in the decades following the Chernobyl nuclear disaster has surprised scientists with its rapidity and diversity. Johnson clearly recounts the horrific event, then features scientists who study birds, rodents, and insects to understand how life has adapted to radioactive--and people-free--conditions. Fascinating photographs of Chernobyl and its inhabitants then and now illustrate scientific practices. Reading list, websites. Bib., glos., ind.

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